A Dictionary of the Economic Products of India: Volume 6, Sabadilla to Silica, Part 2
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:23rd Jan '14
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Reissued in nine parts, this monumental work (1889–96) describes India's commercial plants and produce, providing scientific and vernacular names.
Assisted by contributors, Scottish botanist George Watt (1851–1930) set about organising vast amounts of information on India's commercial plants and produce, including scientific and vernacular names, properties, domestic and medical uses, trade statistics, and published sources. Volume 6, Part 2 (1893) contains entries from Sabadilla to silica.A Scottish doctor and botanist, George Watt (1851–1930) had studied the flora of India for more than a decade before he took on the task of compiling this monumental work. Assisted by numerous contributors, he set about organising vast amounts of information on India's commercial plants and produce, including scientific and vernacular names, properties, domestic and medical uses, trade statistics, and published sources. Watt hoped that the dictionary, 'though not a strictly scientific publication', would be found 'sufficiently accurate in its scientific details for all practical and commercial purposes'. First published in six volumes between 1889 and 1893, with an index volume completed in 1896, the whole work is now reissued in nine separate parts. Volume 6, Part 2 (1893) contains entries from Sabadilla (an imported plant, the seeds of which produce a neurotoxin) to silica (used in the production of glass).
ISBN: 9781108068796
Dimensions: 244mm x 170mm x 35mm
Weight: 1090g
694 pages